Huggo called, “I say, Dods. I’m in a row. So’ll you be one day, if you don’t look out for yourself.”
Doda’s voice: “Oh, dry up—you fool!”
Strike on!
CHAPTER IV.
Her Doda! The one that was her baby girl, that was her tiny daughter! The one that was to be her woman treasury in which she’d pour her woman love; that was to be her self’s own self, her heart’s own heart, her tiny woman-bud to be a woman with her in the house of Harry and of Huggo! Her Doda!
Look, there she is! There’s lovely Doda! She’s fourteen. It’s early in 1915, in the first twelve months of the war. (That war!) She’s at that splendid school. She’s been there nearly three years. She loves it. She’s never so happy as when she’s there, except, judging by her chatter, when she’s away in the holidays at the house of one of her friends. It’s at home—when she is at home—that she’s never really happy. She’s so dull, she always says, at home. She always wants to be doing something, to be seeing something, to be playing with somebody. She can’t bear being in the house. She can’t bear being, of an evening, just alone with Rosalie. “Oh, dear!” she’s always saying. “Oh, dear, I do wish it would hurry up and be term time again.”
“Darling, you are a restless person,” Rosalie says.
“Well, mother, it is dull just sticking here.”